Background
Ernst Julius Eichwald was born December 13, 1913, in Hannover, Germany.
Ernst Julius Eichwald was born December 13, 1913, in Hannover, Germany.
Doctor Eichwald, while studying cancer in the 1940s, described the male-specific antigen and helped establish the foundations of transplantation immunology. He organized the first International Transplantation Conference, sponsored by the National Institutes of Health (National Institutes of Health), in Harriman, New York, in 1953. Founded and edited the journal, Transplantation Bulletin and its successor, Transplantation, for more than 30 years.
And chaired the Transplantation Committee of the National Academy of Sciences from 1955 to 1967.
His research played an important role in the development of successful protocols for organ transplantation in humans. He earned his medical degrees from the University of Freiburg in 1938 and from the University of Utah School of Medicine in 1953.
He served briefly in the German Wehrmacht in 1938, then moved to the United States the same year to begin his pathology training, first in Covington, Kentucky, followed by Dayton, Ohio, and then in Boston, at Children’s Hospital. He subsequently worked as an Assistant in Pathology at Harvard Medical School, followed by service in the United States. Army from 1944 to 1946 as Head of Laboratory Service at the 120th General Hospital, New Guinea, Manila, Philippines, and Kyoto, Japan.
Upon completing his military service, he returned to Boston as an Assistant Pathologist at Children’s Hospital before accepting a faculty position in Pathology at the University of Utah in 1948.
He was recruited to Montana Deaconess Hospital in Great Falls, Montana in 1953 under an arrangement that provided resources to support his research program He established the Laboratory for Experimental Medicine in 1956 that evolved into the McLaughlin Research Institute in Great Falls, an independent biomedical research institute that continues to thrive. He was a Professor of Microbiology at Montana State University, Bozeman, and Chairman of the Montana Chapter of the American Cancer Society.
In 1967 he returned to Salt Lake City as Professor of Pathology and Surgery, and chaired the Pathology Department until his partial retirement in 1979.
In Utah, the focus of his research began to change from transplanted tumors to transplantation of normal tissues. In 1984, on the occasion of his 70th birthday and 30th year as editor, the Transplantation Society dedicated the “Eichwald Festschrift” in his honor.
He continued his laboratory work until 2003. PubMed lists 112 publications.
He was a member of the University of Utah Institutional Review Board which approved an expansion of the eligibility category for the Jarvik-7 artificial heart in 1982.